On 03/18/2016 04:45 PM, Hans Verkuil wrote: > On 03/09/2016 08:09 PM, Javier Martinez Canillas wrote: >> The enum demod_pad_index list the PADs that an analog TV demod has but >> in some decoders the S-Video Y (luminance) and C (chrominance) signals >> are carried by different connectors. So a single DEMOD_PAD_IF_INPUT is >> not enough and an additional PAD is needed in the case of S-Video for >> the additional C signal. >> >> Add a DEMOD_PAD_C_INPUT that can be used for this case and the existing >> DEMOD_PAD_IF_INPUT can be used for either Composite or the Y signal. >> >> Suggested-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >> Signed-off-by: Javier Martinez Canillas <javier@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >> >> --- >> Hello, >> >> This change was suggested by Mauro in [0] although is still not clear >> if this is the way forward since changing PAD indexes can break the >> uAPI depending on how the PADs are looked up. Another alternative is >> to have a PAD type as Mauro mentioned on the same email but since the >> series are RFC, I'm making this change as an example and hopping that >> the patches can help with the discussion. >> >> [0]: http://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-media/msg98042.html >> >> Best regards, >> Javier >> >> include/media/v4l2-mc.h | 3 ++- >> 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) >> >> diff --git a/include/media/v4l2-mc.h b/include/media/v4l2-mc.h >> index 98a938aabdfb..47c00c288a06 100644 >> --- a/include/media/v4l2-mc.h >> +++ b/include/media/v4l2-mc.h >> @@ -94,7 +94,8 @@ enum if_aud_dec_pad_index { >> * @DEMOD_NUM_PADS: Maximum number of output pads. >> */ >> enum demod_pad_index { >> - DEMOD_PAD_IF_INPUT, >> + DEMOD_PAD_IF_INPUT, /* S-Video Y input or Composite */ >> + DEMOD_PAD_C_INPUT, /* S-Video C input or Composite */ >> DEMOD_PAD_VID_OUT, >> DEMOD_PAD_VBI_OUT, >> DEMOD_PAD_AUDIO_OUT, >> > > These pad index enums are butt ugly and won't scale in the long run. An entity > should have just as many pads as it needs and no more. > > If you want to have an heuristic so you can find which pad carries e.g. > composite video, then it is better to ask the subdev for that. > > E.g.: err = v4l2_subdev_call(sd, pad, g_signal_pad, V4L2_PAD_Y_SIG_INPUT, &pad) > > The subdev driver knows which pad has which signal, so this does not rely on > hardcoding all combinations of possible pad types and you can still heuristically > build a media graph for legacy drivers. > > What we do now is reminiscent of the bad old days when the input numbers (as > returned by ENUMINPUT) where mapped to the i2c routing (basically pads). I worked > hard to get rid of that hardcoded relationship and I don't like to see it coming > back. > > Actually, I am not sure if a new subdev op will work at all. This information > really belongs to the device tree or card info. Just as it is done today with > the audio and video s_routing op. The op basically sets up the routing (i.e. > pads). We didn't have pads (or an MC) when I made that op, but the purpose > is the same. > > Although I guess that a g_signal_pad might be enough in many cases. I don't > know what is the best solution, to be honest. All I know is that the current > approach will end in tears. > > Hmm, looking at saa7134-cards you have lists of inputs. You could add a pad_type > field there and use the g_signal_pad to obtain the corresponding pad of the > subdev entity. You'd have pad types TV, COMPOSITE[1-N], SVIDEO[1-N], etc. > > Note that input 1 could map to pad type COMPOSITE3 since that all depends on > how the board is wired up. > > But at least this approach doesn't force subdevs to have more pads than they > need. Actually, there is really no need for these 'pad types'. Why not just put the actual pads in the card info? You know that anyway since you have to configure the routing. So just stick it in the board info structs. Why this rush to get all this in? Can we at least disable the media device creation for these usb and pci devices until we are sure we got all the details right? As long as we don't register the media device these pads aren't used and we can still make changes. Let's be honest: nobody is waiting for media devices for these chipsets. We want it because we want to be consistent and it is great for prototyping, but other than us no one cares. This stuff is really hard to get right, and I feel these things are exposed too soon. And once it is part of the public API it is very hard to revert. Regards, Hans -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-media" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html